Sleepless in Sudan

In case you can't access the Kristof article, he's not really saying anything new: the African Union peacekeepers don't have enough people, money or matériel; the US isn't doing anything; things are getting worse, not better.

But at least Kristof keeps writing about Darfur. He may, at times, sound like a slightly annoying record that keeps skipping, particularly if you listen to the multimedia pieces on the Times website, but he is one of the only people from a large American media outlet who has been struggling to keep Darfur ingrained in his public's fickle short-term memory. And for that, he deserves respect.

Sleepless in Sudan

In case you can't access the Kristof article, he's not really saying anything new: the African Union peacekeepers don't have enough people, money or matériel; the US isn't doing anything; things are getting worse, not better.

But at least Kristof keeps writing about Darfur. He may, at times, sound like a slightly annoying record that keeps skipping, particularly if you listen to the multimedia pieces on the Times website, but he is one of the only people from a large American media outlet who has been struggling to keep Darfur ingrained in his public's fickle short-term memory. And for that, he deserves respect.

Sleepless in Sudan

In case you can't access the Kristof article, he's not really saying anything new: the African Union peacekeepers don't have enough people, money or matériel; the US isn't doing anything; things are getting worse, not better.

But at least Kristof keeps writing about Darfur. He may, at times, sound like a slightly annoying record that keeps skipping, particularly if you listen to the multimedia pieces on the Times website, but he is one of the only people from a large American media outlet who has been struggling to keep Darfur ingrained in his public's fickle short-term memory. And for that, he deserves respect.

Sleepless in Sudan

In case you can't access the Kristof article, he's not really saying anything new: the African Union peacekeepers don't have enough people, money or matériel; the US isn't doing anything; things are getting worse, not better.

But at least Kristof keeps writing about Darfur. He may, at times, sound like a slightly annoying record that keeps skipping, particularly if you listen to the multimedia pieces on the Times website, but he is one of the only people from a large American media outlet who has been struggling to keep Darfur ingrained in his public's fickle short-term memory. And for that, he deserves respect.

Sleepless in Sudan

In case you can't access the Kristof article, he's not really saying anything new: the African Union peacekeepers don't have enough people, money or matériel; the US isn't doing anything; things are getting worse, not better.

But at least Kristof keeps writing about Darfur. He may, at times, sound like a slightly annoying record that keeps skipping, particularly if you listen to the multimedia pieces on the Times website, but he is one of the only people from a large American media outlet who has been struggling to keep Darfur ingrained in his public's fickle short-term memory. And for that, he deserves respect.

Sleepless in Sudan

In case you can't access the Kristof article, he's not really saying anything new: the African Union peacekeepers don't have enough people, money or matériel; the US isn't doing anything; things are getting worse, not better.

But at least Kristof keeps writing about Darfur. He may, at times, sound like a slightly annoying record that keeps skipping, particularly if you listen to the multimedia pieces on the Times website, but he is one of the only people from a large American media outlet who has been struggling to keep Darfur ingrained in his public's fickle short-term memory. And for that, he deserves respect.